1 / 8

THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . General Business Applications

THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . General Business Applications. The Denison Culture Model is a tool which helps organizations, divisions, and teams - and the individuals within each - attain: . A baseline assessment of current cultural strengths and weaknesses.

liana
Télécharger la présentation

THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . General Business Applications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . General Business Applications The Denison Culture Model is a tool which helps organizations, divisions, and teams - and the individuals within each - attain: • A baseline assessment of current cultural strengths and weaknesses. • Understanding of current culture relative to high performing organizations - within a norming base of over 1,000 companies. • A benchmark against which to target change efforts - relative to specific desired performance. • Clear prioritization of short, mid, and long term change efforts - relative to the results sought for each of these time frames. • Understanding of bottom-line related performance (profitability, sales/revenue growth, market share, quality, innovation, and employee satisfaction) - with direct links to cultural elements which may be supporting or hindering these performance areas. • Development of individual leaders who can support and sustain the desired benchmarked culture. • Shared understanding, a shared language, and shared expectations concerning culture and its implications for both individual and group results. • An understanding and utilization of culture as a business oriented, behavioral, tangible, and results oriented mechanism - as opposed to the intangible, cumbersome, and often difficult to implement notions of culture.

  2. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: A Merger/Acquisition Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment within two or more organizations undergoing a merger can facilitate: • Understanding of the organizations’ areas of similarity and/or difference - for the purpose of planning and implementation of integration efforts. • Prioritization of intervention efforts - relative to short, mid, and long term integration demands and goals. • Creation of a cultural benchmark for which the integrated organizations can strive. • Creation of a “third thing” (now understood to be essential to merger success) which will move the focus off of “each other” (blaming, fear, and internal competition) and toward a common, shared culture to be created. • Design of leadership selection/development plans across the merged organization which support the creation of the desired, shared culture.

  3. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: Facing Industry Restructuring Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment within an organization facing industry restructuring can facilitate: • Identification of those cultural areas which, although supportive of success in a previous environment, will hinder success going forward. • Identification of those internal cultural strengths which can be leveraged to support success in the changing and uncertain environment ahead. • Benchmarking against other companies which have successfully transitioned into a restructured and highly uncertain environment. • Targeting and prioritizing of culture change efforts to match desired results - at the organization, department and team levels.

  4. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: A Start-Up Venture Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment within a new or young company can facilitate: • Creation of a cultural benchmark early in the organization’s existence in order to focus organizational development efforts on high impact cultural areas. • Identification of immediate areas of focus which will support the organization and its members in attaining rapid results: • Does the organization have a clear mission? • Does it have strong “bench strength”? • Does it have systems sufficient to support initial performance goals? • Does it have avenues for effective communication amongthe ranks and teams for the purpose of operations, addressing customer concerns, and growth? • Is the organization concerned with the customer’s viewpoint and needs? • Attainment of a baseline against which the start-up can later assess itself and shift/re-order development efforts as it moves forward.

  5. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: A New CEO Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment upon arrival of new CEO or top leader can facilitate: • The new leader’s rapid understanding and interpretation of organizational (as well as departmental/ divisional/team) strengths and weaknesses, and prioritization of these areas for both leverage and development. • The new leader’s understanding of the organization’s specific performance challenges via a cultural framework (system functioning, cross-functional break-downs, broad-level as well as specific strengths and weaknesses, links of the organization’s culture to performance factors, etc.). • A baseline against which the new leader can later measure his/her success in moving the organization forward toward high performance.

  6. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: An Organization in Decline Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment within an older company facing difficulty responding to change or encountering decline can facilitate: • Interpretation of cultural factors and their possible links to the decline of the organization’s performance. • Is there a clear mission for the organization? • Is there enough adaptability/flexibility in the organization to respond to a changing environment? • Are the systems current and supportive of successful goal attainment? • Is the organization continuing to learn and develop the competencies of its personnel? • Is the organization listening to and responding to the concerns of its customers - or is it “doing what has always worked” regardless of what the customer wants? • Prioritization of efforts to reverse the decline relative to areas of specific cultural strengths and weaknesses and desired business results.

  7. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: A New Strategic Initiative Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment within an organization, division, or team implementing a new strategic initiative can facilitate: • Understanding of whether or not the necessary cultural conditions exist to support the successful implementation of the initiative. • Is the mission clear? • Is there high involvement and support for the initiative? • Is there the required adaptability to support a new/different path? • Are the systems and structures in place to ensure the initiative’s quality implementation? • Prioritization of systemic-efforts (communication processes, systems, competency requirements, cross-team efforts, etc.) which must be implemented simultaneous to the new strategy to ensure success.

  8. THE DENISON CULTURE MODEL . . . Applications: Customer Service Challenges Implementation of the Denison Culture Assessment within an organization or division facing customer service challenges can facilitate: • Identification of the key cultural elements which are acting as barriers to customer service. • Do individuals at all levels embrace and “own” customer service as a performance priority? • Are individuals at all levels held accountable for providing quality customer service? • Are individuals empowered, trained, and provided resources to act on the customer’s behalf? • Are customer service decisions made at the level where the most information resides? • Are systems in place to provide integrated, seamless responses to customer needs? • Are customers’ concerns sought and integrated into strategic decisions and goals? • Definition and prioritization of actions to quickly address the cultural weaknesses which are serving as primary barriers to customer service.

More Related